Keanu (2016) Poster

(2016)

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7/10
Hilarious take on traditional action/comedy.
cadillac2022 April 2016
Key and Peele have established themselves with their show as two of the leaders of small screen comedy. Their brand of comedy pokes fun at stereotypes and generic film tropes, with heavy influences from the cinema world. Their skits are often cinematic and ridiculous, but in the best kinds of way. Now, they carry that over to an actual movie and the results are often times hilarious. While not always successful, when they are, Keanu is laugh out loud funny. With huge influences from traditional cinema, ranging from romantic comedy to 80's action, Keanu covers a range of genres, providing that same ridiculous kind of comedy fans are used to.

The film kicks off with a bang, delivering a stylish opening action scene that introduces us to the titular Keanu, a cute-beyond-words kitten that you immediately fall in love with. We're then introduced to our dynamic duo, Rell, a man-child lacking direction in his life who has recently lost his girlfriend, and Clarence, the straight arrow of the two who is happily married, but is so caught up in trying to please everyone else, he never takes time for himself. Once Keanu enters the picture, the two find themselves spiraling downward into a world of gang warfare, crime, and mistaken identity, all in pursuit of retrieving the adorable little Keanu.

If you've seen Key & Peele, the humor here will feel familiar. Working under the show's director, Peter Atencio, and with Peele in the writer's seat, all have a firm grasp of how to craft cinema and then skewer it. Both characters constantly feel out of place while at the same time handling themselves well, and much of the comedy comes from both the familiar fish out of water story and some surprises. What helps is that the film never really feels forced. Our heroes never feel too unnatural in their actions, though it is slightly mystifying that they are continuously believed to be tougher than they actually are. The action is well done too, with it feeling like it wouldn't be out of place in an action movie. And Keanu replacing what would be a person in distress makes for a hilarious spoof on traditional damsel- in-distress type tropes. Our villains also fare well, with one particular hilarious scene seeing Clarence bond with other gangsters over George Michael music.

As stated above, not every joke works, with several falling flat or getting little more than a chuckle, but more often than not the movie knows when to end a joke or just what to do to surprise or make the audience laugh. It also helps to know movies well to catch several of the references or tropes. Where the film could have made many missteps, it makes wise decisions in terms of balancing comedy, action, and drama and knows when it's comedy may be going too far and for too long. I often wondered if Key and Peele would take their comedy to the film world, as they have always clearly loved movies, and now that they've finally done so, they have delivered. Not a perfect comedy, but a very funny one and shows that the two have promise for a future in the cinema world. It's my hope that Keanu is just the beginning for these two.
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5/10
Has its moments but not enough for me.
Oberrated1 May 2016
Warning: Spoilers
I am a huge fan of Key and Peele. Their show was my whole existence and I still go around doing the "I said biiiitch" skit everywhere I go. So with this, I was expecting a good bit of laughs to come of 'Keanu' but I was left a little disappointed. 'Keanu' was not a total fail, it had its moments, in my opinion, but to me it felt like an overly drawn out K&P skit on their show. Mostly a third season skit at that. Key and Peele themselves were naturally hilarious as usual. Their deliverance is perfect it was just the material was beaten to death to me. Overall, not terrible but not great. Just an average comedy from excellent comedians.... The cat was cute though.
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6/10
Brilliantly Stupid
ThomasDrufke29 April 2016
Who hasn't been waiting for Key and Peele to put out a movie together? 'Key and Peele' was one of the best sketch comedy shows of recent memory. Their dynamic on screen is always must watch television and so we were all waiting to see how it would translate to the big screen. For the most part, Keanu works. It does a good job of incorporating the same humor from their show into the film. I just wish they pushed it even further. There are plenty of laugh out loud moments, but the plot of Keanu falls back into clichéd territory far too often.

It's largely a spoof of action films in the same vein as the avidly popular Jump Street films. Instead of going undercover to take down drug dealers, the duo played by Key and Peele, pretend they are drug dealers to win back the kitten that was taken from them. But besides that, the plot unravels exactly as you would expect. You could make the argument that it's not even necessarily a full on spoof, especially with its attempt at drama quite a few times throughout the film.

With that said, when the laughs hit, they hit hard. There's something about the quick witted banter between Keegan-Michael Key and Jordan Peele that it becomes addicting to watch after a while. I just feel they could have taken it a step further. The runtime feels a little long in the tooth too, especially towards the climax.

The supporting cast is okay, with a few surprises here and there, but the real hero here is Keanu the kitten. It isn't named Keanu by accident, and I enjoyed how they played off his name throughout the film. But don't go in expecting Keanu to be the center focus. The kitten only gets like 25 minutes of screen time, but it isn't wasted.

Overall, Keanu features the incredible duo of Key and Peele and fans of the sketch show will no doubt walk away loving this, but there was still some untapped areas to be tackled. Whether it's a sequel to Keanu, a return to TV, or a completely fresh idea, I'm down to watch anything these guys do.

+Incredible duo

+Brilliantly stupid premise

-But it ends up feeling cliché and uninspired

-Uneven

6.8/10
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7/10
A Comedy Worth Watching
allstarrunner28 April 2016
This was one of the best comedies that I have seen in some time; that isn't to say you will fall out of your seat laughing - but the laughter was consistent from beginning to end, and that is pretty much the only thing that matters to me when I decide to go see a comedy.

Seeing how this movie was a clear reference to Keanu Reeves "John Wick", at least as far as the marketing is concerned, I thought the movie would be more of a direct spoof of that movie; but it wasn't - it was more so just a general action comedy and I wouldn't even go so far as to call it a "spoof" movie even though they were certainly playing off well known action tropes.

My bottom line: Is this movie worth shelling out the $ to go see in the theater, in my opinion, yes it is. Get some friends and go have some good laughs.
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7/10
Key & Peele's 1st movie + cute kitten = good fun
grantss16 April 2017
Clarence (Keegan-Michael Key) is a conservative suburbanite with a wife and child. His cousin, Rell (Jordan Peele), is a bong-smoking slacker. Then one day Rell finds a kitten on his doorstep and immediately takes it in. He names the kitten Keanu. A few weeks later, in a case of mistaken identity, members of the Blips drug gang break into his house, ransack it and take Keanu. Rell and Clarence set off into Blips territory to recover Keanu.

Only watched this because it stars Keegan-Michael Key and Jordan Peele. Loved their comedy show, Key and Peele, and a full-length comedy feature film starring them sounded promising.

The movie certainly retains much of the trademark Key and Peele humour. Add in an absurd-yet-fun plot and a cute kitten and you have a good comedy movie. Some great scenes and lines. Key and Peele are in fine form in the lead roles, with spot-on delivery and the wonderful comedic chemistry that their TV show demonstrated.

Not brilliant though. As with many transitions from TV to film, the momentum and ideas seem to diminish as the movie goes on - the core plot line proves difficult to sustain for 90+ minutes. The comedy is still there, but the movie becomes more uneven the further into it you go. Some pretty weak scenes towards the end. The plot becomes quite haphazard and farcical.

Overall, however, Keanu is good fun and well worth watching.
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6/10
Yo, where's the cat ?
RealLiveClaude15 April 2018
Warning: Spoilers
This comedy starring a duo which adapted some caracters they portrayed in a TV show, shows promising, but becomes a bit long. We would have liked to see more of the cat.

However, the misadventures of those "misfits" into gangland has its moments, with the references of the late George Michael and Keanu Reeves. And somewhat the cat saves the day at one point...

It remains violent at times when too much of gunplay is seen. And crude language as well. Watch it just if you would like an idea how it is to meddle with gangland wars...

And yeah, the cat makes it well...
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6/10
Disappointed
dunnypop3 June 2016
First off, I love Key & Peele... I was devastated when I realized that the last episode was their series finale. The movie plays as a weird surreal action movie... I guess it's like Ride Along but played with less slap stick. After watching the trailer multiple times, I figured Keanu was going to have a lot more... but the trailer had all the best parts and the best punchlines.

The plot is a bit shallow as the premise is a runaway kitten and then being found and then going to get the kitten back from captures. I guess you can compare this with Pineapple Express which basically is a simple story of stoners running away... but Pineapple Express has a ton of interesting characters and weirdo situations. Keanu had a couple of weird situations and no real interesting characters except one cameo. Watch the trailer and you're good - it pretty much sums up the entire film and all it's jokes.
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4/10
Thin and Over-Stretched, This Concept Doesn't Have the Legs for Feature-Length
drqshadow-reviews28 July 2016
Key and Peele, in their first starring vehicle, play a pair of soft suburban dudes who somehow find themselves acting like thuggish, grizzled killers to retrieve a stolen kitten (the titular Keanu). It's a terrible screenplay, but at least the laughs are there for the first act. After that, it falls into endless re-hashes, basically telling the same two or three jokes against a different backdrop for the length of the picture. I loved these guys on TV, but Keanu doesn't do a great job of highlighting their versatility and eventually goes beyond satire to become exactly the type of movie they're lampooning. Would've made a hilarious five-minute fake trailer on the small screen, which may shine a light on the type of growing pains to expect if they continue this transition to feature-length material.
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6/10
cute kitty but needs to be funnier
SnoopyStyle31 August 2016
Assassins (Jordan Peele, Keegan-Michael Key) shoot up a drug factory. A kitty escapes. Rell Williams (Jordan Peele) is depressed after getting dumped by his girlfriend. He is lifted up by finding the kitty on his doorstep and he names her Keanu. His cousin and best friend Clarence Goobril (Keegan-Michael Key) needs to man up for his wife Hannah (Nia Long). Rell's home is ransacked and Keanu goes missing. Small time dealer Hulka (Will Forte) points the finger at a local gang. The guys take on gangster persona "Tectonic" and "Shark Tank". They meet Hi-C (Tiffany Haddish) and leader Cheddar (Method Man) who mistakes them for the assassins Allentown Boys.

Firstly, the kitty is really cute. The guys have great chemistry. The ridiculous premise is set up for outrageous humor. There are some cute laughs at times but it doesn't stay at a high enough level. It's funny skit material but it doesn't fill out. It's a little thin. The movie tries to add a couple of comedic performances from Will Forte and Anna Faris. They only really hit singles rather than home runs. The movie needs to be more ridiculous. It needs to take on the gangsta genre in a deeper way. The guys are capable of more.
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3/10
Cute cat but not much more.
Quietb-121 May 2016
Warning: Spoilers
it is always difficult to combine excessive violence and comedy and come out with something that works. Here is another example of why it doesn't work. There is nothing funny about murders and gangs shooting it out.

The cat who never grows past being a kitten is the highlight of the movie. It is watchable when there is a cute cat on screen. Most of the other stuff you have seen before. There's the club, the drugs and the salty redundant language.

There is no need to pay to see this in a theater. It will play just as mediocre on a home platform. A cat might have nine lives. Unless you have time to spare, no need to waste it on this one.
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9/10
Quite good!
fil-nik0917 September 2016
I really liked this film. It was entertaining and it was funny! And I must say that most of the comedies I have watched I did not find funny at all, but really at all. This one was funny almost the entire time - especially those George Michael references to the Faith video and songs which were played in the car. And I must say I wonder what George Michael thought about the film and use of his songs! And just because it is George, somehow I expected the guy to reveal himself as gay at the end of the film ( or earlier) but I guess I assumed wrong.

The two main guys were really funny. I do not know them from other films, but, here, they were good.

The cat was really cute too and the thing with a calendar was awesome! Really creative photos!

This gets nine rating from me. It was funny, entertaining, properly paces ( not too slow or too rushed) and references to other films and persons were hilarious.
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6/10
Watch it for the kitten and stars Peele and Key; otherwise, very violent and offensive in parts
inkblot113 October 2016
Warning: Spoilers
Rell (Jordan Peele) has just lost his girlfriend, her decision. Now he is a couch potato, crying and smoking weed. His pal Clarence (Keegan Michael Key), however, is happily married to a beautiful gal (Nia Long). Meanwhile, a meth lab is raided and all of the cookers are, well, "cooked" and drugs stolen. However, one being makes it out alive. A darling kitten runs frantically away and makes it to Rell's doorway. Wow, this wee cat arrives just at the right moment to heal Rell's heart! Naming the feline Keanu, things are looking up. Its not for long. While Rell is out, the members of a gang raid his house, mistaking his house for his neighbor's, a low level drug dealer. They take Keanu! With Clarence's wife going out of town, Rell convinces his C-pal to help him get back Keanu, even if they have to become "fake gangsters" to infiltrate the network of bad guys and thieves. Can these two basically decent guys truly dive into a dangerous world and act like tough killers? What if one of the gang members, Hi-C, starts to capture Rell's heart? First, this is not my kind of film, being too violent and raunchy. I confess I watched it because a) I was with a pal who suggested it, b) I love cats and c) I like funnymen like Key and Peele. The darling cat and the two stars are the only reasons to watch it, truly. Otherwise, there are shootouts, strip clubs, and bad language in abundance. Therefore, unless you can keep your thumb on fast forward, you might want to skip it. Hopefully, Peele, Key, and Keanu will all make a family film next time out.
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3/10
Remarkably bland
Rendanlovell7 May 2016
'Keanu' is one of those movies that you watch the trailer for and think,"That could either be really good or really bad". Unfortunately for anyone that is a fan of Key & Peele (as I am) you will sorely disappointed. I envy those that can watch a copy and paste movie and still find it as entertaining as the last movie that did that. Because I can't get sucked into a film that doesn't do anything new. And 'Keanu' doesn't do anything new at all. In fact it shameless rips tons of different movies off. Being a comedy, I expected this to happen here, but I also expected it to rip things off in a clever way. Never in the film did I get the impression that they were parodying any of this

The most heinous, shameless rip off is it's plot line. Which was basically just a reskinned, less entertaining version of '21 Jump Street'. The story is literally about two guys that infiltrate a gang to find something or someone. Right off the bat it's clear they don't belong in this world but they do enough dumb things to gain the gangs respect.

After getting in good they realize that they may be in too deep. There is even a scene where one or more of the main characters gets super high and hallucinates. Exactly like the Jump Street movies. The only difference here is that it is not done in clever or funny way.

Most of the film is like this. Shamelessly ripping off other, better movies. The worst part is it neither acknowledges or makes fun of the way that it's doing this. It acts like everything it's doing is completely original and hopes that you won't notice. Not mention that most of the things that happen don't even matter to the plot at all.

Nearly half of the film is filled with scenes that do absolutely nothing to further the plot. It stops the movie, tells a couple bad jokes, and gets back to things. Yet, it doesn't do it that quickly. There is one scene in particular where they are in a mansion with Anna Faris that drags on for way to long. It goes on for ten or fifteen minutes telling the same jokes on loop over and over.

"Oh, this isn't gangster man. Wtf". "You guys aren't real gangsters if you don't listen to this." And queue laugh track. (spoiler) As if the film isn't standard enough it even has the whole, one main character is actually a cop twist ending. By that point I was no longer laughing with the movie, I was laughing at the movie. And at all the incredibly dumb things it did.

I kid you not there is a scene where a wife calls her husband and says that a trusted friend tried something bad to her. Naturally he wants to know what it was but she inexplicably hangs up before she tells him. Then she gets back to him and he just knocks the guy out. Like, I thought that was a friend. Plus, you don't even know what he did. No one on earth would do what you just did. Why did this happen?

It, like many other parts of this movie, seemed to be thrown in just to get a laugh. The writers didn't think about logic or reason but instead opted for a cheap chuckle. The entire film was filled with moments that were so bad but easy to fix. It was clear that the writers didn't care about making a good movie and instead simply wanted to pump this out. Nothing made any sense and no one bothered asking about it.

However, I will say that Key & Peele continue to have great chemistry. They gave very committed performances and were one of very few saving graces. The only other one would be the absurd story. The plot is very tired, boring, and predictable but it's story concept is just absurd enough to work. It was fairly fun to see every single person want this random cat. And it made the odd motivations a little easier to forgive. That being said, I would not recommend this film. It's overlong, dull, flat, predictable, and remarkably unfunny.
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7/10
"Keanu" is a very good first foray into feature films for the funny duo of Key and Peele.
dave-mcclain29 April 2016
Meet Keegan-Michael Key and Jordan Peele. Although many are already well-acquainted with the duo, the comedy "Keanu" (R, 1:38) is their first feature film together, serving as their introduction to the unitiated. Although they have each done projects on their own, these two comedians are best known as a team who met as cast members on MADtv and then starred in "Key & Peele", their own sketch comedy series, which was on television's Comedy Central for five seasons (2012-2015). That show was critically-acclaimed and award-winning, but underseen by the general public. The end of "Key & Peele" served as the beginning of Key and Peele's pairing in movies and "Keanu" proves to be a great vehicle for their pop culture aware and racially insightful comedy, not to mention their significant chemistry.

The title character is a cute little kitten (actually, one of seven used in filming), which shares his name with a certain movie star, that name meaning "cool breeze" in Hawaiian. At the beginning of the film, the kitten avoids injury and escapes the scene of a shoot-out at an illicit drug production facility. The kitten belonged to drug dealer King Diaz, whose place and people were shot-up in that first scene. The shooters, a pair of very scary, long-haired, darkly-dressed, ninja-like specters called the Allentown Boys, also take a shine to the kitten, which runs off as the massacre is ending. The little guy runs through the streets of L.A. until he ends up on the doorstep of a depressed man whose girlfriend has just left him.

Rell (Jordan Peele) quickly and deeply bonds with the kitten, whom he cleans up and names. Keanu's considerable cuteness brings Rell out of his emotional funk and Rell, a photographer, starts creating photos of the kitten in mock-ups of classic movie scenes. When Rell's cousin, Clarence (Keegan-Michael Key), comes by, he's also immediately taken in by Keanu's charms. Clarence's wife (Nia Long), who has joined their neighbor (Rob Huebel), on a weekend getaway so their daughters could spend time together, urges Clarence to use that couple of days to have some fun and cut loose. Clarence heads across town to Rell's place for a weekend that turns out to be much more than anyone bargained for.

After coming home from a movie, the pair discover that Rell's home has been ransacked and Keanu is gone. Rell desperately asks Hulka (SNL's Will Forte), his neighbor and drug dealer, if he saw anything. Hulka says he had recently seen members of the gang the 17th Street Blips (gangbangers who had been kicked out of the Bloods and the Crips) nearby. Rell and Clarence find the Blips at a strip club called High Priced Vixens (HPV for short) and see that Cheddar (Method Man), the Blips' leader, has adopted Keanu. Rell and Clarence try to play it cool, mentioning that they like the cat. Mistaking them for The Allentown Boys, Cheddar says he'll give them the cat if they go with his crew on a job and teach them a few things.

Rell and Clarence aren't exactly thugs. They argue over who talks more "white" and Clarence is obsessed with the music of George Michael. But they do their best to live up to the badass reputation of the Allentown Boys long enough to get Keanu back. Rell and Clarence join "Hi-C" (Tiffany Haddish), Trunk (Darrell Britt-Gibson), Bud (Jason Mitchell) and Stitches (Jamal Neighbors) on a delivery to the home of Anna Farris (as herself) which becomes comically bizarre – both for those who go inside the house and those who wait outside in their van. Before Keanu's fate is finally determined, Rell and Clarence party with the Blips, run into the real Allentown Boys and meet a drug kingpin (Luis Guzman) who recognizes Keanu as his cousin King Diaz' kitten and insists on having the little guy. (That's one popular pussy cat!) "Keanu" is an understated but fun movie, and a great initial foray into feature films for Key and Peele. In keeping with their sketch comedy background, the story and the characters are humorously unrealistic, but are good for more than a few laughs. The script by Peele and Alex Rubens overplays some of the gags, but includes some smart plot twists. (Whether you see them coming or not, they are pretty enjoyable.) Director Peter Atencio keeps things moving and strikes a good balance between light-hearted and serious, obviously helped by his two talented leads. It's the charm and chemistry of Key and Peele which accounts for much of this film's appeal. (And a certain adorable kitten is also a big part of that appeal, unless, of course, you're a soul-less cat-hater.) This modern day Abbott and Costello effectively entertain with "Keanu", and it's obvious that their first feature isn't their last. "B+"
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6/10
"Wordness to the turdness."
drewnes30 May 2021
I needed to watch something that would make me laugh, and who other than Key & Peele. If you like their skits, then this movie is for you. Oh and the kitten is pretty adorable too (and I don't say that often).
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7/10
Some really funny parts, a tad uneven
jellopuke11 March 2018
The premise is a little stretched in parts, but there's some really great comedy bits in here. Devolves into an action movie at the end, but they kind of had themselves backed into a corner. They didn't take themselves too seriously overall, so you can overlook the fact that Key suddenly became a great shot and had no problem killing after a movie of being chicken. This was a decent comedy and worth watching.
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6/10
Uneven and stretched 'ying and yang' adult comedy
jamesrupert201430 June 2020
A couple of inoffensive cousins (Rell Williams, Keegan-Michael Key) get mixed up in a murderous gangsta turf war and a related violent 'custody' battle over a kitten (Keanu, voiced (briefly) by Keanu Reeves). The core premise is amusing (no matter how vicious and malignant they are, all of the criminals love the kitten) but is too slender to stretch into a full-length movie. Most of the scenes go on too long and after a while everything starts to look and sound the same. The plot, which essentially buttresses a single joke, doesn't make a lot of sense and the final 'twist' is a bit of a stretch even for a farce. Considering the heightened racial sensitivities these days (early 2020), it is interesting to see a film where the 'n-word' features so prominently as a comic tool (supporting 'context is everything' arguments I guess). The cast is quite good, especially Williams and Key, and as a counter-point farce superimposing ultra-cute on ultra-violence, the film is moderately successful, but in the end, I only found it fitfully amusing (but other than liking cats, I doubt that I'm in the target audience).
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4/10
Far From Purrr-fect
Comedy is subjective. Trying to explain why something does or doesn't make you laugh is like trying to explain why you think certain foods are delicious; how do you make someone experience your experience? For example, the sketch show "Key & Peele", while often a smart satire on race and sex, was simply and inexplicably hilarious to me. On the other hand, Keanu, a film created and starring the same dudes, has (arguably) nowhere near the laughs. Despite some all-in comedic performances from two of the most talented guys around, it simply isn't very funny. Through a series of unfortunate events, two mild-mannered men go looking for a kitten and find themselves in the midst of a war between competing drug gangs. Key and Peele display the same comedy-in-sync-ness they became famous for, and they deserve a vehicle much better than this to display their skill. Unfortunately the movie itself never quite finds its balance. It's an absurdist comedy that feels both too absurd and not absurd enough. The plot is shoddy at best, and the shallow levels of character give way to whatever joke seems to be funniest at that moment. None of that would matter, of course, if I just found the movie more consistently funny. Not that it's devoid LOL moments; Key and Peele both have a knack for putting a twist on a line or a facial expression to give it an added layer of wit (i.e. how they act when they think they're about to be killed). Unfortunately, they have created such anticipation through years of brilliant TV work, anything less than wall-to-wall guffaws can be a disappointment.
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6/10
The kitten was cute
freemantle_uk29 June 2019
Warning: Spoilers
Key and Peele have a huge fanbase, but for me the big appeal of Keanu is the little kitten. And Keanu the kitten was a cute little thing and his bits were the best bits for me. Otherwise the film was a fairly average offering. Key and Peele clearly have chemistry considering their working history but most of the jokes were lightweight and the story was pretty standard. The best part was Keanu Reeves' cameo. Sadly underwhelming.
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2/10
Meh
Babsmarkert3 May 2016
A friend recommended this movie to me. I'd seen a few Key and Peele skits (some were funny, some not so much), so I thought I might as well try it.

It wasn't bad, but not great either. The best way I can think of to describe it is "Meh." Some of the jokes were funny, but others fell flat. I often found myself laughing out of pity rather than at the scene itself. My sister described watching it as "second-hand embarrassment," which I think is accurate. It was almost painful to watch.

I feel bad giving such a low rating, but I just couldn't find much to like. The cat was cute, but it didn't salvage the film. The plot was decent but choppy.

I think maybe if I was more of a fan of Key and Peele, I'd have liked this better? I don't know.
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8/10
It's fresh, silly, and smart as hell
Quinoa19844 May 2016
When it comes to being a 'gangsta' (or um 'gangster' is the way to say it but I usually see it spelled the former way), people tend to come in that lingo of "H.A.M" (Hard as a Moter-effer). If you want to be part of a crew doing things like slinging drugs or hanging in the back of a strip club, you got to have a walk, you got to have the right talk, you got to know that guns will be part of it and probably doing drugs from time to time as well (and if you got to plug a few people along the way, well, all the better for street cred). But this is also something we see a lot in movies and television (even, of course, The Wire had its gangster elements in a strip club/drug slinging world), and it's very much in both a real world context and the movies in tandem that Key and Peele come in with their characters in the extremely, surprisingly funny Keanu.

The trailer promises some fish-out-of-water fun, where the comedy duo (coming to movies for the first time following a successful Comedy Central series also skewering race and pop culture in expert ways), playing basically middle-class dorks, have to descend into the criminal underworld of the 17th Street Blips (you can find them on 17th Street, naturally) in order to retrieve Peele's character's cat dubbed the title character (posters for other Warner brothers HAM classics like Heat and New Jack City, the latter being ironic for a couple of reasons, don his walls). There were a couple of things I knew I could expect - George Michael jokes to be sure, though not quite to the extent where Key gets the others in the gangster crew, well, into that s*** - but I didn't expect that they could keep up the humor throughout. They can, and they do.

I think what helps is that you believe this action-thriller movie world. It has an authenticity not unlike Hot Fuzz; this is made by people who, I suspect, really love these scuzzy, ultra-violent action flicks (and the whole angle of the cat comes from John Wick, albeit it's not quite *that* violent, few things are). There's an affection that seeps through, and it's also telling a story that makes it so that Key and Peele aren't just one ting throughout. They can both be comic relief or they can be the straight guy; something in a scene or happening just before it will trigger one of them to get even 'more' into character. That last part is a lot of what drives the humor, and it helps that a) they commit to these 'characters' within their characters, and b) there are other "roles" being played by others. With the exception of Method Man's Cheddar, almost none of the major or supporting characters is quite who they seem to be.

This is also a joy when you watch Tarantino flicks, though here the tone's more like a Harold and Kumar Go to White Castle: the tone is constantly irreverent, and often the laughs - massive ones, from the guts many times over - come from these guys being funny together, having perfect timing, and that they keep on coming up against greater and more dangerous obstacles (i.e. those two silent creepy killers that set the chain of events in the film at the start). But the strain of satire on class and culture is the other thing keeping the comedy and even the action fresh and alive.

The attention to how ridiculous these movies can get is one thing (again, Hot Fuzz), and some of the casting helps a great deal with that (two words: Anna Faris, good God she nearly steals the show, but just nearly). But I can't help but keep thinking about how it's so fresh to see what it means to be "black" (in quotes, certainly) in culture and in the movies and then reflected back in life again. Showing just a smidgen of being a dork is a no-no, but what's refreshing is how the others in the van start bopping their heads to George Michael and one of them gets a tattoo with his name (!) It commits to everything it's going for.

In other words, in Keanu being a H.A.M. drug-slinging killer may be one thing, and acting like it is another, and to be both is worth a lot of comedy (especially when it comes to these guys when they, you know, get to having to deal with things like guns that they're clearly over their head with). How does one get into that mind-set? Watch a lot of movies and try to make sure one curbs the Richard-Pryor-imitating a-white-guy-voice. And if there's a cuter thing than Keanu in movies this year then I'll have to resign as a film critic and get one myself!
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6/10
I liked it. Different can be funny.
matthew100018 December 2020
I'm not sure what people are after when looking for comedy. People have different views on what makes a belly laugh or just a smirk. For me this was just what I needed at the time, yes it's silly and yes it's not a serious action movie but it did make me laugh, so it's a 6 from me.
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1/10
Soooo disappointing...
aeasmmikey2 May 2016
I personally think their sketch comedy is borderline brilliant. So I was really looking forward to this movie.

This movie is just plain awful. i am honestly not sure what movie others were watching when they said it was laugh out loud funny. it is not.

It reminds me of a lot of recent Paul Rudd-Seth Rogan movies. You know the kind: these guys think they are so frickin' hilarious just being themselves that no script is needed. That is what this movie felt like. I truly feel there was no written script; that there may have been vague "ideas" of what they wanted to have happen, and just threw the actors in and said "be funny; say something funny." the whole part with Anna Farris in the house and the rest of the guys waiting out in the car -- nothing came out of that scene that was remotely funny.

And the cat? Way too little of the cat. And when he was on screen, there was nothing funny about it.

The weird wife-friend sub plot went no where. Thank God.

Gosh, guys. For your first movie, was so expecting better
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Likable comedy
Wizard-818 December 2016
Warning: Spoilers
I feel I should first confess that before sitting down to watch this movie, I had seen very little of the comedy team of Key and Peele. Though the little I had seen of them showed the duo had charm and amusing humor. And "Keanu" proved to be a good showcase of showing the two's talents. Actually, I didn't laugh out loud too many times while watching the movie (though there ARE some genuine laughs here and there), but the movie's constant amusing tone did leave me with a smile on my lips throughout. And while the movie does definitely earn an "R" rating, director Peter Atencio directs all this adult material in a way that doesn't feel heavy handed or raunchy at all, instead giving it a surprisingly agreeable tone. The movie is to a degree kind of predictable (I early on guessed what the "deus ex machina" twist that happened near the end would be), and there are a few plot points that are kind of unclear (like how the hit men in the opening scene of the movie escaped from the cops). But the movie as a whole is pleasant to watch.

Oh, and the kitten is indeed cute.
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6/10
An entertaining film with some enjoyable performances, but most of the jokes don't land and the plot is very generic.
Pjtaylor-96-1380449 August 2016
'Keanu (2016)', Key and Peele's feature film debut, focuses on a couple of guys who pose as gang members in order to retrieve a stolen cat. The premise isn't all that interesting, but the main draw of the flick is the two leads. Their comedy central sketch show is hilarious at times, though it's also uneven. This movie suffers from being too complex for its own good, coming across as a fantastic short sketch dragged out to become an alright feature film. Don't get me wrong, it is funny at times and always remains enjoyable. In fact, it's entertaining for the majority of the run-time.

The plot simply can't withstand the pressure of the run-time, with the film's structure seeming to only get in the way of the comedy. There's the arbitrary act breaks and action set-pieces, which feel more like obligations than extensions of the premise. Simultaneously, it is also quite compact and doesn't go the places I thought it would. It plays it safe for the most part, though there is some racial-based humour, and falls flat sometimes because of it. The movie tells its story whilst dealing out the comedy in fairly large but contained doses. It doesn't feel too improvisational or too written, with the humour fitting the scene it's in. Its nice that the flick is led by the plot rather than the jokes, as it makes for a more refined and consistent journey. The plot isn't great, though, meandering a little in places and featuring a few unbelievable - and almost unnecessary - set-pieces that use way too much slow-motion. On the whole, the script is good with a tangible sense of heightened reality. The banter between the two protagonists works well; it feels genuine, if a little stereotypical. For me, most of its jokes don't land and the ones that do only garner a grin or chuckle. There's no belly laughs here.

Keegan Michael Key and Jordan Peele are pretty good in the lead roles, the latter even co-penned the script, but they ultimately play characters we've seen before in their sketches. It works for the most part and because they are comfortable with their parts, and they are both likable and instantly relatable. It's when the pair slip into their 'alter-egos' to blend in with the gang that things become a little annoying, especially after a while. I found Key's character in particular rather grating - with his exaggerated cadence, accent, excessive use of profanity and lowered (by an octave, I think) voice culminating in an irritating act that's only tolerable in small doses. Unfortunately, these false personas perforate the majority of the picture. The other actors are good in their roles, though all of them are generic and generally quite uninspired. There's a little development here, but none of the gang members have an arc and the wife is barely on screen.

The titular kitten is cute and well-trained, being extremely feeble yet surprisingly durable. However, the kitten seems to have some hypnotic powers as characters are constantly making questionable decisions just to get their hands on him. I get it's a cute cat and people like cats, but some of these hardened gangstas are dropping their tough personas and risking lives. It doesn't make a lot of sense to me. The film is rather contrived with a few odd coincidences, as well as some forced revelations that don't feel earned. The tone is consistent and the pace taught, though there's a little fat that could've been trimmed. It doesn't waste too much time, knows what it is and doesn't pretend to be profound or anything other than silly popcorn entertainment. The direction is competent but nothing special; the cinematography and editing are clean and easy to read.

Overall, the film is entertaining throughout, with some enjoyable performances and a couple of funny segments. However, most of the jokes don't land fully and the lead 'gangsta' personas are tiresome. It's well-made and typically enjoyable, but generic and, ultimately, pretty forgettable: 6/10.
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